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From: on Jul 1, 12:23 pm
wrote: I thought it might be neat to get a ham license in addition to the Commercial First 'Phone of 1956. Got up to 8 or 9 WPM and wondered what the hell I was wasting all that time for? Thank you for confirming something I have suspected for a long time now, Len. What...you've NEVER seen my statement BEFORE? :-) Do the math. 1959 was how long ago? FORTY-SIX years. Let's see...in 1959 I was three years from leaving a MAJOR HF communications complex, a part of ACAN that had existed since 1942 and had changed its name to STARCOM. Worldwide network of HF stations...running TTY and Voice...NO "CW." Big Time in HF. So, I'm supposed to get into the "cutting edge of amateur technology" by LEARNING/TESTING FOR RADIOTELEGRAPHY?!?!? Wow...talk about being BRAIN DEAD in PA! And now..."you've JUST suspected it?" :-) :-) :-) BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !! [to use a message device beloved by your buddie, the TN Talibanian...who does that frequently] Class D CB was a year old back in 1959, I had a nice, conversion-finished Austin-Healey sports car in Greater L.A. which then had a population of about 6 million and was considered to be the aerospace capital of the USA doing high- tech electronics, was seriously considering changing my major from illustration to engineering...and I was "supposed" to be REGRESSING TO RADIOTELEGRAPHY in order to show "dedication and committment to the ham community"?!?!?!?!? Wow, yeah, I could "get my very own radio station" and get "my very own callsign" as a radio amateur!!! I was already a professional in radio-electronics and had spent three full years doing HF radio communications in the military. Ptui. I went to Henry Radio in L.A. and bought a Johnson Viking Messenger CB that year. Worked great in the aluminum-body Austin-Healey. Got my "very own callsign" (11W3725)... BWAHAHAHAH...as if that 'meant' anything. GAVE UP any thought of "showing dedication and committment to some amateur community" by learning RADIOTELEGRAPHY as "cutting-edge technology" in 1959. I should learn morse just to "talk to the rest of the world?" Been there, done that 24/7 already. ...and you "just suspected it!" Just HOW LONG does it take to close the synapses in your mind, whiz kid? By the way, how many children have you parented? |
"Michael Coslo" wrote in message ... Dee Flint wrote: "John Smith" wrote in message ... Dee wrote, "... only fax and SSTV have a small enough band width to be practical." That is not only a ridiculous statement, it is preposterous and shows a total lack of knowledge of the state of data compaction. However, it proves you are not aware of what is technically possible and therefore are in a poor position to advise or inform others and, the sorry state of amateurs technical savvy in general! John Ok then, show me the math that demonstrates you can transmit a one megabyte picture in seconds on the HF bands using only 300 baud. To get it down to seconds requires data compression/encryption techniques that can reduce the data by a 1000 fold. Obviously, images can be transmitted by digital modes as well as the analog method of SSTV. Digital images would have to be compressed/encrypted also to get the bandwidth down to acceptable ranges for HF and we're still talking on the same order of magnitude to do so. Even with a fast broadband internet connection, I've seen some material that still takes a noticeable time to download. Is that a good way of transmitting the image? It can be. Seems I've heard about a digital image transmission mode. Isn't most of the stuff off the internet (mpg comes to mind) digitally encoded. Even on my broadband connection it will occasionally jerk and pause. If you have to slow it down to 300 baud for the HF bands so as not to consume too much bandwidth, that would become even jerkier. Does that make the Analog SSTV mode obsolete? No more obsolete than SSB or FM. It is a fairly quick mode, and with a computer is now inexpensive, and fun. I'm looking forward to an education on the modes from someone with technical savvy. Mr Smith? - Mike KB3EIA - I doubt if he's got the technical savvy. Simple arithmetic shows the inherent problems. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
Dee Flint wrote:
"Michael Coslo" wrote in message ... Dee Flint wrote: "John Smith" wrote in message ... Dee wrote, "... only fax and SSTV have a small enough band width to be practical." That is not only a ridiculous statement, it is preposterous and shows a total lack of knowledge of the state of data compaction. However, it proves you are not aware of what is technically possible and therefore are in a poor position to advise or inform others and, the sorry state of amateurs technical savvy in general! John Ok then, show me the math that demonstrates you can transmit a one megabyte picture in seconds on the HF bands using only 300 baud. To get it down to seconds requires data compression/encryption techniques that can reduce the data by a 1000 fold. Obviously, images can be transmitted by digital modes as well as the analog method of SSTV. Digital images would have to be compressed/encrypted also to get the bandwidth down to acceptable ranges for HF and we're still talking on the same order of magnitude to do so. Even with a fast broadband internet connection, I've seen some material that still takes a noticeable time to download. Is that a good way of transmitting the image? It can be. Seems I've heard about a digital image transmission mode. Isn't most of the stuff off the internet (mpg comes to mind) digitally encoded. Even on my broadband connection it will occasionally jerk and pause. If you have to slow it down to 300 baud for the HF bands so as not to consume too much bandwidth, that would become even jerkier. Very true. Accepted minimum rate for a recognizable "talking head" type video is 32Kbit/second. I made a test jpg image @ 640 by 480, level 5 (unacceptable for me, but others may find that okay) Typical scene, some amateurs sitting around a radio, no large expanses of sky. It was 553.6 Kbits. Assuming that the transmission rate would be similar to Packet radio at ..3Kbit/second it is obvious that video would be impossible to do live, and grossly impractical to do as say an mpeg. That 640 by 480 jpeg might be within the realm of feasibility at just around 31 minutes. Note that this does not include error checking lags. And there will be errors. Note that these are very rough calculations. Does that make the Analog SSTV mode obsolete? No more obsolete than SSB or FM. It is a fairly quick mode, and with a computer is now inexpensive, and fun. I'm looking forward to an education on the modes from someone with technical savvy. Mr Smith? - Mike KB3EIA - I doubt if he's got the technical savvy. Simple arithmetic shows the inherent problems. Yeah, like I said 8^) - Mike KB3EIA - |
Dee:
My "simple math" is actually just your "simple mind" and you cannot tell the difference. If I send perfect video, encrypted off a DVD you will indeed notice that it slows, pauses and is not acceptable for broadcast--however, if you encrypt the sound to mp3 and the video to avi it becomes childs play for anyone who is technically savvy and results in video and audio which is magnitudes faster than SSTV. Get away from these ancient amateurs who have gone blind and ask where it has "ALREADY BEEN BEING DONE FOR A DECADE!!!" Standing there looking stupid is no way to go through life girl! John "Dee Flint" wrote in message ... "Michael Coslo" wrote in message ... Dee Flint wrote: "John Smith" wrote in message ... Dee wrote, "... only fax and SSTV have a small enough band width to be practical." That is not only a ridiculous statement, it is preposterous and shows a total lack of knowledge of the state of data compaction. However, it proves you are not aware of what is technically possible and therefore are in a poor position to advise or inform others and, the sorry state of amateurs technical savvy in general! John Ok then, show me the math that demonstrates you can transmit a one megabyte picture in seconds on the HF bands using only 300 baud. To get it down to seconds requires data compression/encryption techniques that can reduce the data by a 1000 fold. Obviously, images can be transmitted by digital modes as well as the analog method of SSTV. Digital images would have to be compressed/encrypted also to get the bandwidth down to acceptable ranges for HF and we're still talking on the same order of magnitude to do so. Even with a fast broadband internet connection, I've seen some material that still takes a noticeable time to download. Is that a good way of transmitting the image? It can be. Seems I've heard about a digital image transmission mode. Isn't most of the stuff off the internet (mpg comes to mind) digitally encoded. Even on my broadband connection it will occasionally jerk and pause. If you have to slow it down to 300 baud for the HF bands so as not to consume too much bandwidth, that would become even jerkier. Does that make the Analog SSTV mode obsolete? No more obsolete than SSB or FM. It is a fairly quick mode, and with a computer is now inexpensive, and fun. I'm looking forward to an education on the modes from someone with technical savvy. Mr Smith? - Mike KB3EIA - I doubt if he's got the technical savvy. Simple arithmetic shows the inherent problems. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
Michael Coslo wrote: Dee Flint wrote: "John Smith" wrote in message ... Dee wrote, "... only fax and SSTV have a small enough band width to be practical." That is not only a ridiculous statement, it is preposterous and shows a total lack of knowledge of the state of data compaction. However, it proves you are not aware of what is technically possible and therefore are in a poor position to advise or inform others and, the sorry state of amateurs technical savvy in general! John Ok then, show me the math that demonstrates you can transmit a one megabyte picture in seconds on the HF bands using only 300 baud. To get it down to seconds requires data compression/encryption techniques that can reduce the data by a 1000 fold. break Obviously, images can be transmitted by digital modes as well as the analog method of SSTV. Is that a good way of transmitting the image? It can be. Seems I've heard about a digital image transmission mode. Does that make the Analog SSTV mode obsolete? No more obsolete than SSB or FM. It is a fairly quick mode, and with a computer is now inexpensive, and fun. Analog SSTV is obsolete, as is SSB clearly, FM might be. Obselete doesn't mean useless I'm looking forward to an education on the modes from someone with technical savvy. Mr Smith? - Mike KB3EIA - |
Mike:
Yes, that quite well proves you don't even have a clue where to begin and what would be a practical method to accomplish it... .... don't feel alone, these ancient brain deads here are in the same boat and have ran off and ****ed off all those who can do such things... .... at first I just thought you guys were probably not interested in video conferance by radio--now I find out you are simply unable and even lack the basic concept of how it is done! John "Mike Coslo" wrote in message ... Dee Flint wrote: "Michael Coslo" wrote in message ... Dee Flint wrote: "John Smith" wrote in message ... Dee wrote, "... only fax and SSTV have a small enough band width to be practical." That is not only a ridiculous statement, it is preposterous and shows a total lack of knowledge of the state of data compaction. However, it proves you are not aware of what is technically possible and therefore are in a poor position to advise or inform others and, the sorry state of amateurs technical savvy in general! John Ok then, show me the math that demonstrates you can transmit a one megabyte picture in seconds on the HF bands using only 300 baud. To get it down to seconds requires data compression/encryption techniques that can reduce the data by a 1000 fold. Obviously, images can be transmitted by digital modes as well as the analog method of SSTV. Digital images would have to be compressed/encrypted also to get the bandwidth down to acceptable ranges for HF and we're still talking on the same order of magnitude to do so. Even with a fast broadband internet connection, I've seen some material that still takes a noticeable time to download. Is that a good way of transmitting the image? It can be. Seems I've heard about a digital image transmission mode. Isn't most of the stuff off the internet (mpg comes to mind) digitally encoded. Even on my broadband connection it will occasionally jerk and pause. If you have to slow it down to 300 baud for the HF bands so as not to consume too much bandwidth, that would become even jerkier. Very true. Accepted minimum rate for a recognizable "talking head" type video is 32Kbit/second. I made a test jpg image @ 640 by 480, level 5 (unacceptable for me, but others may find that okay) Typical scene, some amateurs sitting around a radio, no large expanses of sky. It was 553.6 Kbits. Assuming that the transmission rate would be similar to Packet radio at .3Kbit/second it is obvious that video would be impossible to do live, and grossly impractical to do as say an mpeg. That 640 by 480 jpeg might be within the realm of feasibility at just around 31 minutes. Note that this does not include error checking lags. And there will be errors. Note that these are very rough calculations. Does that make the Analog SSTV mode obsolete? No more obsolete than SSB or FM. It is a fairly quick mode, and with a computer is now inexpensive, and fun. I'm looking forward to an education on the modes from someone with technical savvy. Mr Smith? - Mike KB3EIA - I doubt if he's got the technical savvy. Simple arithmetic shows the inherent problems. Yeah, like I said 8^) - Mike KB3EIA - |
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"John Smith" wrote in message ... Mike: Yes, that quite well proves you don't even have a clue where to begin and what would be a practical method to accomplish it... ... don't feel alone, these ancient brain deads here are in the same boat and have ran off and ****ed off all those who can do such things... ... at first I just thought you guys were probably not interested in video conferance by radio--now I find out you are simply unable and even lack the basic concept of how it is done! John OK, SHOW US THE MATH that it can be done on HF within 300 baud. We've already got real time video with audio on VHF and higher but show me it can be done. Explain in detail the encryption/decryption method. And so on. As an engineer, I can follow the math if you can post it. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
Dee:
The only person talking 300 baud is you, I told you to throw away that 300 baud modem and get a decent one (or revamp an old phone modem to your needs.) Since you didn't even understand that, you certainly won't grasp the rest... John "Dee Flint" wrote in message ... "John Smith" wrote in message ... Mike: Yes, that quite well proves you don't even have a clue where to begin and what would be a practical method to accomplish it... ... don't feel alone, these ancient brain deads here are in the same boat and have ran off and ****ed off all those who can do such things... ... at first I just thought you guys were probably not interested in video conferance by radio--now I find out you are simply unable and even lack the basic concept of how it is done! John OK, SHOW US THE MATH that it can be done on HF within 300 baud. We've already got real time video with audio on VHF and higher but show me it can be done. Explain in detail the encryption/decryption method. And so on. As an engineer, I can follow the math if you can post it. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
"John Smith" wrote in message ... Dee: The only person talking 300 baud is you, I told you to throw away that 300 baud modem and get a decent one (or revamp an old phone modem to your needs.) Since you didn't even understand that, you certainly won't grasp the rest... John Well it just happens to be against the rules to use higher than 300 baud on HF so that is the limit that the data/video/audio signal must fit within. There is a very good reason for that limit. The higher the baud rate, the greater the bandwidth required, and the fewer users can fit on the band. And eventually you hit a baud rate where the required bandwidth is such that one signal won't stay within the upper and lower band edges. Now if you're talking VHF, it's already been done and your "bright, new minds" are a day late and a dollar short. Since you don't understand that, you certainly won't grasp the rest.... Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
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